Inexorable leftist gibbering from someone somewhere. || "Our press, which you appear to regard as being free ... is the most enslaved and the vilest thing." -- William Cobbett. || “Tridents (sic) are not weapons of mass destruction.” -- Nadine Dorries MP

Ahem. It may of course just be something of a mid-summer dip, with Blair away and a lot of problems all coming to roost at the same time. What's even more gratifying for the Tories, and troubling for Labour is that this is happening when the Conservatives still don't have any set in stone or recognisable policies. Sure, Cameron launched the supposed "mini-manifesto" last week, but it got hardly any attention in the media, and three quarters of the policies are the same old half-baked ones of yore, ranging from the ridiculous, such as a "UK bill of rights", to the "Flatter and simpler" taxes, for which read less for the rich and more for the poor. Cameron also faces a backlash from grassroot Tories, unhappy with his continuing efforts to get more women candidates nominated for parliament by local constituencies. The Lib Dems also climb back up, which isn't much of a surprise. If Menzies Campbell had been a little stronger on the issue of the Middle East, and the party actually decided to try and get a higher media profile, it might do even better. At the moment it's just coasting, much as it was before Charles Kennedy was forced to resign.

The more interesting part of the poll is that on the terror threat itself. Only 1% (and considering opinion polls generally have a margin of error of around 3 to 4%, it becomes even more meaningless) think that the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have made the country safer, which is perhaps the biggest indictment of Britain's foreign policy yet made. When it comes to the level of threat, the results are more ambiguous. 20% think that the government is telling the truth, 21% believe it's exaggerated, but a staggering 51% think the government is actually telling less than it knows about the threat. It has to be said that the question isn't exactly clear - are the government telling less than they know because they're exaggerating it, or less because there's an even greater threat than they're letting on? Either way, it shows that less than a quarter of the public think the government is being entirely honest.

The 51% figure though is the most worrying. If over half the public believe there's an even bigger threat than we're being told about, the government's propaganda and the media bluster is undoubtedly working, but it's not leading to support for the government - far from it, it would seem. It ties in with the Spectator poll, which apart from having horribly leading questions, showed that 53% wanted an even "tougher" response in relation to the terror threat.

You also can't blame the public for feeling attacked from all sides at the moment - at the end of the report on the 10 O'Clock News last night on the charges against the terror plot suspects, the BBC reporter needlessly reminded everyone of how one police officer had described it as a plan "to commit murder on a massive scale". Peter Clarke was on next, scaremongering about the threat and coming up with such ridiculous figures for the amount of stuff they'd seized, which must have been more or less everything the accused had in their houses, all in the aid of defending the police from suggestions that the plot was mostly invented and politically motivated. His case won't have been helped by another letter in today's Guardian, which suggests it would be possible to create TATP in an aircraft's toilet - but only if the person had uninterrupted access to it for two or more return flights to America. It's also worth remembering Lord Stevens' rant in the NOTW.

Where do we go from here? From a Labour point of view, Blair has to go. His cronies have to go. Even Gordon Brown, unlikely as he is to change anything, would be better than the band of robots which continue to control the Labour front-bench. That Stephen Byers talked a load of crap over the weekend about scrapping inheritance tax, only to get slapped down, was encouraging in that there are still signs of independent thought somewhere beneath surface. From the left's standpoint, there needs to be more honesty about the real level of threat we face, and there needs to be a greater effort to tackle the nonsense talked about immigration. It's not racist to put limits on it, but it's also an act of political bankruptcy to do it just to appease the screaming the tabloids, especially when we as yet do not have the full facts. Once the conference season kicks off, things might well calm down, but for now exaggeration seems to be the order of the day.

The opinion poll is interesting. Most people, myself included, thought the latest round of "terror" would provide a bounce for Labour but it looks like we might be seeing the bounceback instead. There's a possibility that new scares now have the effect of reminding more and more people that Blair and co have made an enormous arse of the "war" on terror over the last five years. If that's what it is, fingers crossed, Blair's finished.

The poll is definitely bad news for Reid which is always a good thing.

On the TAPT thing, did you see this stuff about Operation Bojinka? Don't want to prejudge a trial but in general terms I suspect something like the alleged plot is theoretically possible.

Either way, New Labour have delighted in attempting to making political hay with it all in the way we've come to know and detest. Let's hope we've finally reached the point where it's going to blow up in their faces (metaphorically speaking).

Hardly anyone seems to believe that they would have been able to make these bombs on the flights with the materials they allegedly have: the Register article has been passed around the net now, and there's been two letters to the Guardian, one suggesting that it might be possible if they had access to the toilet of the aircraft for the equivalent of two transatlantic flights, as I mentioned in the post.

I posted this on the Tomb's comments, which pretty much sums up my thoughts:

The problem with the charges against the men is that no one believes they could have constructed the bombs on the planes without them either blowing up in their faces, them being found out in the process of trying to make the bombs, or just simply failing. It may well turn out that they had the motive to do so, as it seems Kamel Bourgass had in the "ricin" case, and it seems likely they at least had a small amount of chemicals, although whether they could have made a bomb with what they had we obviously won't know.

The question is why on earth they thought it was a good idea to try to emulate Ramzi Yousef's "Project Bojinka" plan which failed in the first place. There's nothing to suggest that they would have bettered his attempt to blow up a plane. Why target planes in such a complicated manner when you apparently have the materials to carry out another 7/7, which would be so much easier?

That's what makes me wonder whether the plane plot is a complete load of crap, especially seeing as if we're to trust reports, a good number of them didn't have passports. This is where the Pakistan link may have been crucial in their arrest of Rauf - who knows what the intelligence services there might be telling ours?

For the police to charge the men there has to be a decent amount of evidence, or at least a motive, however paranoid or sceptical of the terrorist threat you are. It may yet turn out to be a ricin case style fiasco, but it seems pointless to speculate until the trial actually starts.

What also makes people question the supposed threat is when the CPS come up with such mickey mouse charges, like with the 17-year-old; he apparently had a book on bombs, which may well be the fucking anarchist's cookbook, some wills, suicide notes and a map of Afghanistan. God knows however many teenagers might be classed as terrorists if their bedrooms were searched by police.